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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Reprise Review: The Fix / Keith Nixon

This is the first installment of a new feature we've decided to try out. It was inspired by a post by Jim Devitt at Indies Unlimited a week ago called Is Your Old Blog Post an Antique or New Content? In it he discussed how old blog posts were actually new for those who missed them the first time around. In some instances, when republishing an old post there might be pertinent updates. So we've decided to periodically reprise older reviews. (We'll stick with the good ones, for all the obvious reasons.) For our first, I picked this review of Pal Keith Nixon's book, because it was just republished by a small indie publisher and it gives me a chance to update the buy links and cover.

Click
on a YES above to go to appropriate page in Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or
Smashwords store

Author:

“Keith
Nixon started writing at an early age, it's something he's always done, like
tooth ache the need to write never quite goes away.

Keith still
has to work for a living but he has been able to travel extensively with his
job and meet many interesting people, some of which may be in his books.

His measure
of success in life is whether tie, socks and watch have been permanently
discarded.”

Keith is Books and Pals’latest Pal and has
quickly become one of our most prolific most prolific Pal. Follow Keith on Twitter or visit his blog, where he’ll reprise his Books and
Pals reviews and more.

Description:

“It’s pre
crash 2007 and financial investment banker Josh Dedman’s life is unravelling
fast. He’s fired after £20 million goes missing from the bank. His long-time
girlfriend cheats on him, then dumps him. His only friends are a Russian tramp
who claims to be ex-KGB and a really irritating bloke he’s just met on the
train. His waking hours are a nightmare and his dreams are haunted by a mystery
blonde.”

Appraisal:

When I
think comedic crime books, my immediate thought is Donald Westlake’s Dortmunder
series (perhaps the most well known being The
Hot Rock, which became a movie starring Robert Redford and George Segal).
In these books, mastermind Dortmunder and his gang of criminals commit a series
of well-planned crimes. They’re never caught, yet always end up empty handed in
the end. The comedy comes from the idiosyncrasies of the characters and all the
ways their best laid plans go awry.

In Keith
Nixon’s debut novel, The Fix, the
characters provide plenty of comedic moments with their quirks, but rather than
a criminal as protagonist, we have a main character accused of the crime who
keeps bumbling his way in deeper, providing some humorous moments. The
protagonist, Josh, works for a bank, which also has some comedic moments,
poking fun at the business world, not unlike what you might see in the movie
and TV series The Office. Unlike
Westlake’s humor, which at times could be almost slapstick-like and might
remind someone of The Keystone Kops, Nixon’s humor is more subtle, as in, “Culpepper,
being a banker, was as bereft of emotion as a corpse is of life.” As a former
bank employee, this line really hit home for me.

Josh is a
likeable character. The reader wants everything to work out for him. Does he
manage to come out unscathed? Who stole the £20 million? Does Josh manage to
get the girl? You’ll have to read The Fix
yourself to find out.

Disclaimer:

Many of the books reviewed by BigAls' Books and Pals are free review copies received from the author or a representative in exchange for an honest review.

BigAl's Books and Pals may receive a small commission for purchases made at Amazon.com, Amazon.uk, Barnes and Noble, or Smashwords after clicking on a link to one of their products as well as clicking on any other ad presented.

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